Toxins and Infant Feeding
The question of toxins in breastmilk is being
addressed in a patient handout because the issue comes up every few months, as
regular as clockwork, in the media and frightens many pregnant women out of
breastfeeding their babies and many women who are already breastfeeding into
stopping. Journalists do not seem to know how to handle this question very
well. It is likely that some have an ulterior motive (“my baby wasn’t breastfed
and he’s okay”), and are carrying some baggage of their own, thus finding a way
of getting back at breastfeeding advocates and justifying their “choice of
infant feeding”. It is, of course, unprofessional to do this, but that doesn’t
stop them. Others are merely trying to get out the news, but without
understanding, often, what they are doing. They don’t understand, for example,
that by talking about toxins in breastmilk and considering formula as an almost
as good alternative, they are striking a blow against breastfeeding.
Why are there all these studies that look at
toxins in breastmilk? One gets the impression that there is panic about the
state of breastmilk in the modern world, that it is so polluted that everyone
is trying to study it. But the reason that breastmilk is being studied so often
is that it is easily available, and gives us an easily obtained sample of human
fluid. That’s the reason, not because scientists are worried about breastmilk
in particular.
Is formula almost the same as breastmilk?
No, and not by a long shot. Just because every few
years the formula manufacturers add something to their formulas that we knew
was in breastmilk for years, but the manufacturers denied were of any
importance, doesn’t mean that the “new and improved” formula is just like
breastmilk. In some cases, the formula is improved, but remember, they were
telling us that the formula before the “new and improved” version was also
“almost like breastmilk”. This is true, for example, of the long chained
polyunsaturated fatty acids (DHA and AA) that are supposed to make your baby
smarter (one company even calls their formula A+, but it deserves a C- at
best). We’ve known how important these fats are for many years, but for many
years (before they were added to formula, of course), the manufacturers, echoed
by many health professionals, just kept saying that it didn’t matter, and that
there was no proof that these fats were of any importance at all (this is still
in the Canadian Paediatric Society’s 1995 statement on the nutrient needs of
premature babies). This cycle of “our milk is just like breastmilk” followed by
“we have now added x to our milk so that it is even more like breastmilk” has
been going on since the 19th century.
The truth of the matter is this:
1. Just adding something to formula, even if it is
in the same amounts as in breastmilk, does not mean that the baby will get the
amount or the best sort he needs of this particular something. The example of
iron helps us understand this. Breastmilk contains enough iron (with the stores
the baby has during pregnancy), to keep the baby iron sufficient for at least 6
months. To maintain iron sufficiency in formula fed babies, formula needs to
contain at least 6 times more iron than breastmilk, just because iron does not
get absorbed from the baby’s gut as well from formula as it does from
breastmilk.
2. There are still hundreds of components of breastmilk that are still not
added to formulas.
3. Breastmilk varies in what it contains, from morning to evening, from day to
day, from beginning of the feeding to the end, from day 1 to day 4 to day 10 to
day 100, so there is no way we can know what breastmilk really contains. This
means that there is no way to duplicate breastmilk because there is no such
thing as a standard breastmilk. In fact, since every woman produces somewhat
different breastmilk, the notion of a standard breastmilk becomes an absurdity.
Breastmilk is a living, dynamic fluid. Formula is a chemical soup.
So what does this mean?
This means that we should consider formula a drug,
which, if one thinks about it, is exactly what it is. It replaces a normal
fluid (breastmilk). It is only very superficially like that fluid it replaces.
There are known side effects of formula, in the short term, medium term and
long term, some quite serious and irreversible. Formula may, occasionally, be
necessary, but so are drugs. In rare cases, formula can be lifesaving, but so
can some drugs.
A drug is, as my pharmacology professor said to us
in medical school, a poison or toxin with beneficial side effects. There is
much wisdom in that statement. So when a mother decides to feed her baby
artificial milk instead of breastfeeding, she is not avoiding the problem of
giving toxins to her baby.
In fact, it is amazing how indulgent we are
towards formulas. In none of the articles or television programmes that bring
us the news of toxins in breastmilk, do they ever, in any I have read or heard,
talk about toxins in formula. There are toxins in formula. Why would everything
on earth be polluted, even the far reaches of the Arctic, but not formula?
Formula is full of heavy metals, including lead, for example, in quantities
much higher than breastmilk. And why would pesticides not be present in
formula? After all, the cows do grow up in the countryside where the fields are
sprayed. And soybeans grow there too. Interesting you never read about this in
the newspapers.
But toxins are not good are they?
No they are not, but breastfeeding helps to
diminish their bad effects. Here are some facts:
1. Toxins increase the risk of developing some
cancers. True, but the evidence shows that breastfeeding babies have a lower
risk of some cancers than artificially fed babies.
2. Toxins may interfere with neurological function and learning abilities.
True, but the evidence shows that children who were breastfed do better on
neurological and intelligence tests than artificially fed children, and the
longer they are breastfed, the better they do.
3. Toxins may interfere with immunity. True, but the evidence shows that
infants who are breastfed have better and more mature immunity than
artificially fed infants, and that this better immunity carries on much longer
than the length of time the infant or child is breastfed.
What should you do?
If you breastfeed your baby, you are doing the
best for your baby, and for the world, for that matter. Breastfeeding is a very
environmentally friendly thing to do. Formula feeding pollutes the environment.
The fact that there are pollutants in breastmilk can be likened to the
situation of the canary in the coal mine. We should be worried about what we
are doing to our planet, but this should not lead us to encourage mothers to
feed their babies artificially.
Handout #28 Toxins and Infant Feeding January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC ©2005